dubkitty wrote:i didn't say i was OK with Behringer. there's no point in talking about this if people are are going to ring me up for things i didn't even say. this circular, imma-catch-you-out style of argument establishes nothing about the premises involved.
dubkitty wrote:for me there's no such thing as a pedal that's worth $500. $350, maybe. and is a looper really more complex than the plethora of sub-$300 Behringer synths? you're being gouged. if you're OK with that, very well.
In order to have a conversation it's necessary to define terms and premises or at least acknowledge
whether or not people are talking about the same thing. You brought up Behringer synths as a
comparison to what "value" and "gouging" and "complexity" mean to you and why you won't pay
$500 for any pedal.
But whoismarykelly has brought up the idea that a guitar or an amp or a synth isn't the same object
or tool as a pedal looper, and so to judge "value" or "gouging" or "complexity" in terms of pedal loopers
you really need to talk about other pedal loopers. I provided examples. All of them seem to be around
$500, and many of them require a person to purchase MIDI devices to allow for live-use where parameter
changes are initiated by a footswitch or CV/expression pedal while a person uses two hands to play guitar.
Here is a quote from the Looping Madness thread about the potential need for external devices
for the Poly Beebo (when and if the looper module is released):
Tall Walls wrote:Loki shared a link to the Beebo "loopler" module beta in the Poly Fb group. I haven't spent much time with it, but at first blush it appears that you can't do very much if you don't have a full-on MIDI setup. I can record a loop, but accessing all of the insert/substitute/multiply/etc. functions by poking at the screen while also playing isn't practical. So do I invest in some MIDI controller with a buttload of switches so I can really use this module? Signs point to no. Increasingly I'm just using the Beebo for the convolution reverbs. But even there, the stereo reverb module only has a mono input, so if I'm sending a stereo signal into the Beebo I end up using two mono reverbs. Which sounds nice enough but it's not the same. I'm feeling more and more iffy about the Beebo.
Here is another looper pedal that costs 480 Euros (over $500).
In the video it touts the fact that this pedal has footswitches
for engaging LPF and HPF so you can play guitar with hands and
make changes with feet without buying a secondary switch system.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4DnMpmd3HU[/youtube]
The only thing I'm trying to catch is the drift of your argument.
It's possible to meaningfully and fruitfully talk about both apples
and oranges, but to do so requires making sure those involved are
using mutually coherent terms and definitions.